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For release on delivery
9:25 a.m. EDT (3:25 p.m. CET)
June 22, 2016

Comments on the Resolution Framework
for Banks and Bank Holding Companies in the United States

Remarks by
Stanley Fischer
Vice Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
Panel Discussion on Resolution
Riksbank Macroprudential Conference
Stockholm, Sweden

June 22, 2016

I’m grateful to the organizers for inviting me to participate in this conference. I
would like briefly to describe the legal frameworks that exist for resolving banking
organizations in the United States, the steps that the Federal Reserve and other U.S.
regulators have taken to make global systemically important banking organizations
(GSIBs) in the United States more resolvable, and a few of the criticisms of U.S.
regulatory actions in this area, together with my responses to them. 1
U.S. law provides several legal frameworks for resolving failed financial firms.
In the United States, a failed depository institution is resolved by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) using a framework created by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act. The FDIC has acted as receiver for several thousand failed banks since
1934, including 465 from 2008 through 2012. Most of these failed banks were relatively
small community banks, and all were considerably smaller than the most systemically
important firms active today. 2
While the Federal Deposit Insurance Act creates a special resolution framework
for failed banks, a failed U.S. bank holding company--that is, a corporate entity that
controls one or more banks--would generally be resolved under the same provisions of
the U.S. Bankruptcy Code as would apply to other corporate debtors, such as industrial
firms, in a proceeding overseen by a federal judge. During the recent crisis, fears about
the systemic consequences that would follow from the bankruptcies of systemically
important financial firms motivated extraordinary government actions to prevent such

1

I am grateful to Mark Van Der Weide, Barbara Bouchard and Mark Savignac of the Federal Reserve
Board for their assistance in the preparation of these comments.
2
The average (per bank) assets of the 465 banks resolved by the FDIC between 2008 and 2012 was roughly
$1.5 billion, with a total of $680.3 billion. The largest depository institution ever resolved by the FDIC was
Washington Mutual, which was resolved in 2008 and had total assets of $307 billion prior to failure.

-2firms from failing. Unfortunately, the fears proved well founded: The bankruptcy of
Lehman Brothers Holdings--the largest bankruptcy filing in American history-significantly exacerbated the crisis. 3
To increase the viability of the Bankruptcy Code as a framework for resolving
failed financial firms without major systemic consequences, section 165(d) of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act)
requires large banking organizations to produce resolution plans, also known as living
wills, demonstrating how they could be resolved under the Bankruptcy Code in an
orderly fashion in the event of failure.
Although the Bankruptcy Code provides the default legal framework for the
resolution of a failed bank holding company, Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act creates a
backup resolution framework, called the orderly liquidation authority, to be used if the
resolution of a failed financial company under the Bankruptcy Code would have serious
adverse effects on U.S. financial stability. If that criterion and several others are met,
Title II allows the Secretary of the Treasury to appoint the FDIC as receiver for the failed
financial company as an alternative to a bankruptcy resolution overseen by a judge. The
orderly liquidation authority has several features that could reduce the systemic effect of
a financial company’s failure relative to a bankruptcy resolution, including an orderly
liquidation fund to provide government liquidity support for the failed firm and
provisions to prevent the unwinding of the failed firm’s derivatives and other qualified
financial contracts while they are transferred to a solvent firm.

3

Lehman’s pre-bankruptcy total assets were $691 billion. The second-largest bankruptcy in American
history was the bankruptcy of Washington Mutual, Inc., the savings and loan holding company that owned
Washington Mutual; its pre-failure total assets were nearly $328 billion. Both Lehman and Washington
Mutual filed for bankruptcy in September 2008.

-3The Federal Reserve Board has recently proposed important new rules to increase
the prospects for the orderly resolution of a GSIB with minimal effect on financial
stability. Last October, the Board proposed a rule to subject the eight U.S. GSIBs to total
loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) and long-term debt requirements, building on the
international TLAC standard established by the Financial Stability Board. 4 The proposal
would require these systemically important firms to maintain outstanding a large quantity
of long-term debt that could be used to absorb losses and recapitalize the firm in an
orderly resolution under either the Bankruptcy Code or the orderly liquidation authority. 5
The proposal would also apply internal TLAC and long-term debt requirements to
the U.S. intermediate holding companies of foreign GSIBs in order to facilitate the
recapitalization of a failed foreign GSIB’s U.S. operations. Finally, the proposal would
restrict the operations of GSIB holding companies (as distinct from their operating
subsidiaries) so that those legal entities could go through a resolution proceeding without
setting off short-term wholesale funding runs or otherwise jeopardizing financial
stability.
In May of this year, the Board issued another proposal to make GSIBs more
resolvable. This second proposed rule would impose restrictions on GSIBs’ qualified

4

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2015), “Federal Reserve Board Proposes New Rule
to Strengthen the Ability of Largest Domestic and Foreign Banks Operating in the United States to Be
Resolved without Extraordinary Government Support or Taxpayer Assistance,” press release, October 30,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20151030a.htm.
5
Under the proposal, a U.S. GSIB would be required to hold at a minimum (i) a long-term debt amount of
the greater of 6 percent plus its GSIB surcharge of risk-weighted assets and 4.5 percent of total leverage
exposure and (ii) a TLAC amount of the greater of 18 percent of risk-weighted assets and 9.5 percent of
total leverage exposure. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2015), “Total LossAbsorbing Capacity, Long-Term Debt, and Clean Holding Company Requirements for Systemically
Important U.S. Bank Holding Companies and Intermediate Holding Companies of Systemically Important
Foreign Banking Organizations; Regulatory Capital Deduction for Investments in Certain Unsecured Debt
of Systemically Important U.S. Bank Holding Companies,” notice of proposed rulemaking (Docket
No. R-1523), Federal Register, vol. 80 (November 30), pp. 74931-32. The GSIB has to satisfy both
constraints. TLAC encompasses both equity capital and eligible long-term debt.

-4financial contracts--including derivatives and repo agreements--to guard against the mass
unwinding of those contracts during the resolution of a GSIB. 6 The proposed restrictions
are a key step toward GSIB resolvability because the rapid unwinding of a GSIB’s
qualified financial contracts could destabilize the financial system by causing asset fire
sales and toppling other firms.
Acting in conjunction with the FDIC, the Federal Reserve Board has also sought
to increase GSIB resolvability through its review of the firms’ living wills. In April this
year, the Board and the FDIC announced the results of their review of the eight U.S.
GSIBs’ 2015 resolution plans, which evaluated the plans based on the firms’ capital,
liquidity, governance mechanisms, operational capabilities, legal entity rationalization,
derivatives and trading activities, and responsiveness to prior agency feedback. 7
The agencies found that five of the GSIBs’ plans fell short of the Dodd-Frank
Act’s standard and required those firms to fix the deficiencies in their plans by October of
this year or potentially face more stringent prudential requirements. The agencies also
identified less-severe shortcomings in the plans of all eight GSIBs, which the GSIBs are
expected to address in their next round of resolution plan submissions, due in July 2017.
The deficiencies and shortcomings identified by the agencies touched on most of the
categories I have just listed, especially liquidity, governance mechanisms, operational
capabilities, and legal entity rationalization.

6

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2016), “Federal Reserve Board Proposes Rule to
Support U.S. Financial Stability by Enhancing the Resolvability of Very Large and Complex Financial
Firms,” press release, May 3, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20160503b.htm.
7
See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(2016), “Agencies Announce Determinations and Provide Feedback on Resolution Plans of Eight
Systemically Important, Domestic Banking Institutions,” joint press release, April 13,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20160413a.htm.

-5I want to end by briefly addressing several criticisms that have been made of the
Dodd-Frank Act’s orderly liquidation authority and the Board’s TLAC proposal. One
criticism is that there is no need for the backup orderly liquidation authority because the
Bankruptcy Code provides an adequate framework for the resolution of any financial
company. As Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act recognizes, however, the Bankruptcy Code
may not be adequate to minimize the systemic impact of the resolution of a systemically
important financial firm. The Bankruptcy Code does not direct the judge to take financial
stability into account in making decisions, and it does not provide other important
stabilizing features of the orderly liquidation authority, such as government liquidity
support and stay-and-transfer treatment for qualified financial contracts.
A related line of criticism holds that the orderly liquidation authority enshrines
“too big to fail” and provides for taxpayer bailouts of systemically important firms
through the orderly liquidation fund. However, under the Board’s proposed TLAC rule, a
failed GSIB would be recapitalized by its private-sector long-term creditors (whose debt
claims would be converted into equity), not by the government. The orderly liquidation
fund would be used only to provide liquidity support, not to inject capital, and in the
unlikely event that the fund does incur losses, the Dodd-Frank Act provides that these
losses would be covered by assessments on major financial companies and would not be
passed on to taxpayers. I also note that credit rating agencies have recognized publicsector efforts to end the too-big-to-fail phenomenon. The rating agencies no longer
assume that the U.S. government will take extraordinary actions to prevent the failure of
systemically important U.S. financial firms.

-6Finally, one criticism that has been leveled at our TLAC proposal is that imposing
long-term debt requirements on GSIBs will lead those firms to increase their leverage and
thereby raise their probability of failure, and that they should instead be required to hold
higher levels of equity capital. I agree that equity capital plays a key role in preventing
financial firm failures, and we have raised equity capital requirements for banking
organizations--especially GSIBs--substantially since the crisis. But to protect financial
stability, we must reduce not only the probability that a GSIB will fail, but also the
damage that its failure could do if it were to occur. At the point of failure, a banking
firm’s equity capital is likely to be zero or negative, so to improve GSIB resolvability,
our proposal requires GSIBs to have a thick tranche of gone-concern loss-absorbing
capacity to ensure that resolution authorities will have the necessary raw material to
manufacture fresh equity and recapitalize and stabilize the firm. 8 That is the role played
by the proposal’s long-term debt requirements. And we expect that firms would
generally come into compliance with the proposed requirements by replacing existing
ineligible liabilities with eligible long-term debt rather than by increasing their leverage.
At any rate, even if a firm were to come into compliance in part by increasing the size of
its balance sheet, it would remain subject to our robust equity capital requirements and
leverage limits, which are designed to ensure a very low probability of failure. Finally,
the existence of a thick tranche of loss-absorbing long-term debt should reduce a GSIB’s

8

See Board of Governors (2015), “Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity, Long-Term Debt, and Clean Holding
Company Requirements,” in note 5. Under the proposal, a U.S. GSIB would be subject to external longterm debt requirements of 6 percent of risk-weighted assets plus the amount of the risk-based capital
surcharge applicable to the GSIB under the Board’s GSIB surcharge rule and 4.5 percent of total leverage
exposure.

-7probability of failure by reducing its short-term creditors’ incentives to run at the first
sign of distress.
In short, we and other U.S. regulators are working hard to address the too-big-tofail problem by improving the prospects for the orderly resolution of a GSIB in the
United States. The Dodd-Frank Act gave us tools to reduce the probability of failure of
our largest and most complex banking firms and to significantly reduce the damage that
the failure of such a firm would do to the U.S. financial system and the broader economy.
We have made a lot of progress toward accomplishing these goals, leaving the U.S.
banking system fundamentally safer and stronger, and our work in this area will continue.
Thank you.